1 hr 19 min

Designing for healthy behavior change | Behavioral science with Dr. Amy Bucher Psych Mic

    • Social Sciences

Amy Bucher, Ph.D. is Chief Behavioral Officer at Lirio, which unites behavior science with artificial intelligence to drive healthcare behavior change. She is the author of Engaged: Designing for Behavior Change, published by Rosenfeld Media. Before joining Lirio, Amy worked as Vice President of Behavior Change Design at Mad*Pow,  a strategy and design consultancy, and on behavior change products in-house at CVS Health and Johnson & Johnson. See her website and blog here.
Amy received her A.B. from Harvard University, and her M.A. and Ph.D. in organizational psychology from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She’s a frequent speaker at behavior change and UX conferences where she talks about motivation, engagement, and product design.
Her research interests include motivational design and self-determination theory, social relationships/connections and their effect on well-being and performance, happiness and resilience, and health behaviors such as medication adherence and physical fitness. Her ultimate goal is to apply the learnings of psychology to the realm of health and wellness so that people feel empowered and equipped to live their best lives. 

Topics we cover:
Amy’s early experiences with research & mentorsThe decision to go to grad schoolKnowing what you know now, do you think you’d still have chosen to do PhD?What does it mean to be a behavioral scientist?Do you need a PhD to do this work? What’s the added benefit?Behavioral science, behavioral change design, user experience: what’s the difference?Why Amy didn’t go the faculty/academia routeThe focus of Amy’s PhD program & the intersection of psychology subfieldsAmy’s advice for choosing a graduate programDecision-making & uncertainty after grad schoolWhat skills did you gain from your PhD program that have helped you in industry?Self-determination theoryDoes it matter what you do your PhD in to get into behavioral science?Advice on starting in this field and figuring out if a PhD is needed for the work you want to doAmy’s book, Engaged, and its unique contribution to the fieldWhat has your work in behavioral science and healthcare looked like since your PhD?What kinds of qualities mesh really well with behavior change design?Being the Chief Behavioral Officer at LirioWhat is one skill, quality, or general factor that has served you no matter where you went in life?Visit psychmic.com to sign up for the newsletter, where you'll get career tips, grad school resources, and job opportunities straight to your inbox! Follow @psych_mic on Instagram to submit questions for speakers and stay in the loop.

Music by: Adam Fine 

Amy Bucher, Ph.D. is Chief Behavioral Officer at Lirio, which unites behavior science with artificial intelligence to drive healthcare behavior change. She is the author of Engaged: Designing for Behavior Change, published by Rosenfeld Media. Before joining Lirio, Amy worked as Vice President of Behavior Change Design at Mad*Pow,  a strategy and design consultancy, and on behavior change products in-house at CVS Health and Johnson & Johnson. See her website and blog here.
Amy received her A.B. from Harvard University, and her M.A. and Ph.D. in organizational psychology from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She’s a frequent speaker at behavior change and UX conferences where she talks about motivation, engagement, and product design.
Her research interests include motivational design and self-determination theory, social relationships/connections and their effect on well-being and performance, happiness and resilience, and health behaviors such as medication adherence and physical fitness. Her ultimate goal is to apply the learnings of psychology to the realm of health and wellness so that people feel empowered and equipped to live their best lives. 

Topics we cover:
Amy’s early experiences with research & mentorsThe decision to go to grad schoolKnowing what you know now, do you think you’d still have chosen to do PhD?What does it mean to be a behavioral scientist?Do you need a PhD to do this work? What’s the added benefit?Behavioral science, behavioral change design, user experience: what’s the difference?Why Amy didn’t go the faculty/academia routeThe focus of Amy’s PhD program & the intersection of psychology subfieldsAmy’s advice for choosing a graduate programDecision-making & uncertainty after grad schoolWhat skills did you gain from your PhD program that have helped you in industry?Self-determination theoryDoes it matter what you do your PhD in to get into behavioral science?Advice on starting in this field and figuring out if a PhD is needed for the work you want to doAmy’s book, Engaged, and its unique contribution to the fieldWhat has your work in behavioral science and healthcare looked like since your PhD?What kinds of qualities mesh really well with behavior change design?Being the Chief Behavioral Officer at LirioWhat is one skill, quality, or general factor that has served you no matter where you went in life?Visit psychmic.com to sign up for the newsletter, where you'll get career tips, grad school resources, and job opportunities straight to your inbox! Follow @psych_mic on Instagram to submit questions for speakers and stay in the loop.

Music by: Adam Fine 

1 hr 19 min